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Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair » (Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

Book cover image of Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda

Authors: Pablo Neruda, W. S. Merwin (Translator), Cristina Garcia
ISBN-13: 9780142437704, ISBN-10: 0142437700
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Penguin Group (USA)
Date Published: December 2003
Edition: Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition

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Author Biography: Pablo Neruda

When presenting the legendary Chilean poet Pablo Neruda with the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1971, Karl Ragnar Gierow of the Swedish Academy proclaimed, "Neruda is like catching a condor with a butterfly net. Neruda, in a nutshell, is an unreasonable proposition: the kernel bursts the shell."

Book Synopsis

The Nobel Prize—winning poet's most popular work

When it appeared in 1924, this work launched into the international spotlight a young and unknown poet whose writings would ignite a generation. W. S. Merwin's incomparable translation faces the original Spanish text. Now in a black-spine Classics edition, this book stands as an essential collection that continues to inspire lovers and poets around the world.

Publishers Weekly

This collection of poems, first published by Neruda at the age of 19 in 1924, caused something of a scandal because of its frank and intense sexuality:

``I have gone marking the atlas of your body / with crosses of fire. / My mouth went across: a spider, trying to hide. / In you, behind you, timid, driven by thirst.''

It later became one of Neruda's best-loved works, selling two million copies by the 1960s. Why? With image after arresting image, Neruda charts the oceanic movements of passion, repeatedly summoning imagery of the sea and weather:

``On all sides I see your waist of fog, / and your silence hunts down my afflicted hours; / my kisses anchor, and my moist desire nests / in you with your arms of transparent stone.''

As irresistible as the sea, love is engulfing

(

``You swallowed everything, like distance. / . . . In you everything sank!''

, but also departs as mysteriously as it arrived, leaving the poet's heart a ``pit of debris, fierce cave of the shipwrecked.'' These unabashedly romantic poems, wonderfully translated by Merwin, are illustrated in this edition by the paintings of Jan Thompson Dicks with aptly Fauvist tones and iconic formality. (Dec.)

Table of Contents

Introductionvii
I.Body of a Woman3
II.The Light Wraps You5
III.Ah Vastness of Pines9
IV.The Morning Is Full11
V.So that You Will Hear Me15
VI.I Remember You As You Were21
VII.Leaning into the Afternoons23
VIII.White Bee27
IX.Drunk with Pines33
X.We Have Lost Even35
XI.Almost out of the Sky39
XII.Your Breast Is Enough43
XIII.I Have Gone Marking47
XIV.Every Day You Play53
XV.I Like for You to Be Still57
XVI.In My at Twilight61
XVII.Thinking, Tangling Shadows65
XVIII.Here I Love You71
XIX.Girl Lithe and Tawny75
XX.Tonight I Can Write77
The Song of Despair83
Selected Bibliography91
Suggestions for Further Reading93

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